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Thursday, August 10, 2017
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Authorities have named a suspect in a meth-related killing that shook the Crow Nation last week
A major ruling by a federal court reaffirms the Muscogee Creek Nation’s jurisdiction over its tribal land
An Athabaskan artist revives the tradition of making fish skin baskets
Wednesday, August 9, 2017
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A man accused in last year’s murder of a Crow Agency woman is deemed mentally competent to stand trial
Two tribes are asking a judge to shut down the Dakota Access Pipeline pending more environmental review
The Cherokee Nation aims to eliminate Hepatitis C
Native language revitalization funding program expected to draw competitive application process
Thursday, July 20, 2017
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The Oregon Tribal Fairness Act clears a hurdle on Capitol Hill
Sherman Alexie cuts his book tour short after falling ill with depression
Lakota family seeks to educate Nebraskans about the Blue Water Creek Massacre
Hundreds of Catholics gather in Rapid City in honor of first female Native American saint
Wednesday, July 19, 2017
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Alaska approves exploration of Groundhog copper mine prospect near proposed Pebble Mine
Zuni musician Fernando Cellicion to be honored with lifetime achievement award
Lakota elder overcomes decades of challenges to graduate college
House Republicans: health care plan would leave Indian Health Service unscathed
By Hannah Colton
Congressional Republicans maintain that the American Health Care Act (AHCA), which narrowly passed Thursday in the U.S. House of Representatives, will not significantly affect those in the Indian health system.
Republican U.S. Rep. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma, a member of the Cherokee Nation, says the bill entirely preserves the Indian Health Care Improvement Act, a decades-old law that commits federal funding to tribal health care across the country.
“This doesn’t make any change to Indian Health Services. In fact, the whole section on IHS was left completely alone,” said Rep. Mullin.
The fact that the bill doesn’t touch IHS doesn’t mean it would leave American Indians and Alaska Natives unaffected. The plan would make major cuts to Medicaid, and a New York Times analysis counts older Americans, the poor and people with pre-existing conditions among those who would pay more and/or lose insurance coverage under the AHCA.
“All we did with Medicaid is restore it back to what its intended purpose was,” Mullin said. “That is to be state-run and to fall underneath the four categories it was designed for: the elderly, the disabled, the pregnant mother who is single and low-income, and the child.”
The new AHCA was sent to a House vote so quickly the Congressional Budget Office did not have time to calculate its expected impact beforehand. The CBO’s analysis of an earlier version of the bill, however, projected it would ultimately cause 24 million people to lose their insurance coverage.
The current bill now faces an uphill battle in the Senate. The Fairbanks Daily News Miner reports Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska indicated the Senate will likely take its time drafting a separate healthcare bill.
Murkowski is on the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, which will play a large role in drafting that bill. In a statement Thursday, she said she’ll work to ensure health care reform doesn’t “pull the rug out from those who currently receive coverage.”
“While we work to fix the broken current health-care system,” Murkowski wrote, “I recognize the need to maintain provisions that have worked: the prohibitions on discrimination for pre-existing conditions, no annual or lifetime limits, coverage up to age 26, and Medicaid expansion.”
A spokesman for Alaska Republican Sen. Dan Sullivan told the News-Miner he wants to ensure the Senate’s rewrite of the health care bill protects the Indian Healthcare Improvement Act.
Friday, May 5, 2017
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Oklahoma congressman says Republican healthcare plan won’t affect the Indian Health Service
Advocates observe National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Native Women and Girls
Halifax will reconsider public place names commemorating the city’s notorious founder
Thursday, May 4, 2017
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New police chief hired in Winslow, Arizona just over a year after the fatal police shooting of a Navajo woman
Landmark Minneapolis lake a step closer to changing name from Calhoun to Dakota Bde Maka Ska
Oregon country fair opts not to install a Native American-style totem pole
A Manitoba First Nation is returning home six years after floodwaters drove them out
Friday, March 24, 2017
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Energy Fuels is trying to remove the excess water from an especially wet winter at Canyon Mine, which is not currently operating. (photo: Laurel Morales, KJZZ’s Fronteras Desk)
An Oregon school district is the first to get state approval to keep its Native mascot
Water from a uranium mine near Grand Canyon National Park raises concerns for tribes and environmental groups
The Osage Nation votes to allow same-sex marriage
Advocates praise federal court decision reaffirming tribal custody rights under the Indian Child Welfare Act
Thursday, March 23, 2017
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